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Safety of Microbial Enzymes Used in Food: FDA Perspective

Overview. REGULATORY OPTIONSFood additive (petition)subject to premarket reviewGRAS determination

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Safety of Microbial Enzymes Used in Food: FDA Perspective

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    1. Safety of Microbial Enzymes Used in Food: FDA Perspective Robert I. Merker and Zofia S. Olempska-Beer U.S. Food and Drug Administration Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition Office of Food Additive Safety

    2. First we’ll discuss regulatory options for using enzymes in foods for the U.S. We’ll follow this with a general discussion of the informatio provided in GRAS notices and specific case studies of organisms.First we’ll discuss regulatory options for using enzymes in foods for the U.S. We’ll follow this with a general discussion of the informatio provided in GRAS notices and specific case studies of organisms.

    3. Regulatory Basis 1958: Food Additive Amendments to Federal Food Drug and Cosmetic Act: In the United States, a food additive is defined as: … any substance the intended use of which results or may reasonably be expected to result, directly or indirectly, in its becoming a component or otherwise affecting the characteristics of any food … if such substance is not generally recognized… to be safe under the conditions of its intended use… FFDCA: 201 (s) Authority for FDA to examine the safety of enzymes is in the Food Drug and Cosmetic Act. 1958 Amendments to FFDCA: Definition of Food Additive in 201 (s)Authority for FDA to examine the safety of enzymes is in the Food Drug and Cosmetic Act. 1958 Amendments to FFDCA: Definition of Food Additive in 201 (s)

    4. U.S. Regulatory Processes for Food Ingredients Food Additive Petition Regulation in 21 CFR 172 or 173 GRAS Affirmation Petition Regulation in 21 CFR 184 GRAS Notice Primary route for submitting information on microbial enzymes to FDA Information available on the Internet There are three ways information about enzymes and enzyme safety have been submitted to FDAThere are three ways information about enzymes and enzyme safety have been submitted to FDA

    5. Safety Standard for Food Additives and GRAS ingredients: Reasonable Certainly of No Harm General Recognition of Safety requires Same Quality and Quantity of Scientific Information as required for approval of a Food Additive 21 CFR 170.30 (b) Difference in distribution and acceptance Safety Standard for Food Additives and GRAS ingredients: Reasonable Certainly of No Harm General Recognition of Safety requires Same Quality and Quantity of Scientific Information as required for approval of a Food Additive 21 CFR 170.30 (b) Difference in distribution and acceptance

    6. The GRAS Proposal: 62 FR 18938 April 17, 1997 Proposed notification program for GRAS substances Notifier prepares summary of basis for its GRAS determination Not an iterative process Three categories of response letters “No questions” “No basis” Withdrawn by notifier

    7. The Summary of GRAS Notices At http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~rdb/opa-gras.html Lists all Notices and information about each notice Currently, 24 out of 101 notices are about enzymes Includes a link to the text of FDA’s response letter

    8. GRAS Notices: Enzymes on the Internet

    9. GRAS Affirmation Regulations on Microbial Enzymes

    10. Some Microbial Enzymes are Approved Food Additives

    11. Enzyme Submissions in 2002 GRAS Notices - most commonly used means for submitting information about microbial enzymes to FDA Include published and non-published information Consistency in the categories of information provided in GRAS notices

    12. Information Provided About Microbial Enzyme Preparations in GRAS Notices Safety of the enzyme Safety of the production microorganism Safety of the manufacturing process Safety of the enzyme preparation

    13. The Enzyme Identity (name, IUB classification, CAS Reg. No.) Enzymatic activity Physico-chemical characteristics (e.g., MW, thermal stability, optimum pH) Genetic modifications at the DNA and amino acid levels (if applicable)

    14. The Production Microorganism Name and taxonomic classification Source Important characteristics Nonpathogenic Nontoxigenic History of safe use Modifications (classical mutagenesis; genetic engineering) History of safe use in food or as a source of food ingredientsHistory of safe use in food or as a source of food ingredients

    15. For a Bioengineered Production Microorganism Characterization of the host strain Description of the expression plasmid (genetic material, its identity, organization, and origin) Description of the gene encoding the enzyme (source(s), modifications) Introduction of hereditary materials (DNA) into the host and characterization of the production strain

    16. The Manufacturing Process Fermentation (type of process, raw materials, controls) Removal of the microorganism Recovery (process, raw materials) Purification and concentration Formulation and standardization (e.g., water, sodium chloride, sucrose) Use of food grade materials

    17. The Enzyme Preparation Composition (including total organic solids – TOS) Specifications (Food Chemicals Codex, 4th edition, 1996; JECFA, 2001) Absence of transformable DNA (bioengineered microorganisms)

    18. The Enzyme Preparation, cont. Use in food Level in food (generally very low) Estimation of daily intake Toxicological studies (case-by case basis; may include e.g., gene mutation, chromosomal aberrations, toxicity in rats) Consideration of constituents derived from source, and manufacturing process

    19. Case studies Lipase enzyme preparation from Penicillium camembertii Chymosin enzyme preparation from bioengineered Escherichia coli K-12 ?-amylase enzyme preparation from bioengineered Bacillus licheniformis

    20. Case Studies: Lipase GRN 000068: Lipase enzyme preparation derived from Penicillium camembertii Intended Use: Production of fatty acids from fats and oils Similar to other lipases used in food processing Source Organism (published information) Nontoxigenic Nonpathogenic Long used in the production of Camembert cheese

    21. Lipase: The Manufacturing Process Major steps: Fermentation using food grade ingredients Enzyme secreted into medium Filtration and heat – remove fungal cells EtOH and acid precipitation Centrifuged, dried, crushed, blended with diluent to desired activity

    22. Lipase: The Enzyme Preparation Specifications: Complies with general and additional requirements of Food Chemicals Codex, 4th edition (published) Does not contain detectable antibiotics or mycotoxins (unpublished) Estimated intake: 1 mg/person/day (unpublished)

    23. Lipase: Studies “Pathogenicity” study (published) – organism (P. camembertii) injected into mice – no effects, not recovered Toxicological studies (published) using concentrated lipase enzyme preparation 90 day gavage study in rats up to 2000 mg/kg/d – no effect Bacterial mutagenicity – no effects

    24. Lipase: FDA letter “Based on the information provided by Amano Enzyme, Inc., as well as other information available to FDA, the agency has no questions at this time regarding Amano’s conclusion that the lipase enzyme preparation derived from P. camembertii is GRAS under the intended conditions of use. The agency has not, however, made its own determination regarding the GRAS status of the subject use of this lipase preparation. As always, it is the continuing responsibility of Amano to ensure that food ingredients that the firm markets are safe, and are otherwise in compliance with all applicable legal and regulatory requirements.”

    25. Case Studies: Chymosin from Escherichia coli K-12 First FDA regulation issued on an enzyme preparation produced from a bioengineered organism (21 CFR 184.1685) Bovine enzyme expressed in E. coli K-12 Subsequent regulations: Bovine chymosin from Kluyveromyces marxianus Bovine chymosin from Aspergillus niger

    26. Chymosin from E. coli K-12 The host strain: E. coli K-12 JA198 Nonpathogenic Nontoxigenic The production strain: E. coli K-12 GE81 Contains the expression plasmid pPFZ-87A based on the E. coli vector pBR322 The plasmid carries a gene encoding bovine prochymosin The production organism is nonpathogenic and nontoxigenicThe production organism is nonpathogenic and nontoxigenic

    27. Chymosin from E. coli K-12 The manufacturing process Pure culture fermentation of E. coli K-12 GE81 Prochymosin accumulates within cells as “inclusion bodies” Prochymosin is isolated, purified, and converted to chymosin Chymosin is purified and shown to be identical to bovine chymosin present in rennet (published information)

    28. Case Studies: Bioengineered ?-Amylase GRAS Notice 000022: ?-Amylase enzyme preparation derived from a bioengineered strain of Bacillus licheniformis Bioengineered for enhanced stability at low pH, low calcium concentration and high temperature Intended use: starch hydrolysis in the production of syrups (e.g., high-fructose corn syrup) and alcohol EngineeredEngineered

    29. Bioengineered ?-Amylase: The Enzyme Gene encoding ?-amylase derives from B. licheniformis. Modifications for enhanced stability and a lower calcium requirement (as compared with other ?-amylases): 35 amino acids at amino-terminal region from B. amyloliquefaciens ?- amylase Five additional altered amino acids DNA sequence: highly homologous to those encoding other ?-amylases Same enzymatic function as other ?-amylases that have a history of safe use in food (published)

    30. Bioengineered ?-Amylase: The Production Strain B. licheniformis Nonpathogenic (published) Nontoxigenic (published) History of use as a source of food enzymes (published) Host strain: B. licheniformis strain SJ1707 (sporulation deficient and protease negative) Production strain: LiH 1159 contains plasmid pLiH1108 stably integrated into the host chromosome.

    31. Bioengineered ?-Amylase: The Bioengineered Strain Plasmid pLiH1108 contains: The bioengineered ?-amylase gene Selectable marker: the kanamycin resistance gene encoding aminoglycoside 3’-phosphotransferase II DNA sequences necessary for plasmid integration DNA sequences from the certified cloning vectors pE194 and pUB110

    32. Plasmid Map: pLiH1108

    33. Bioengineered ?-Amylase: The Manufacturing Process Pure culture fermentation of the bioengineered production strain LiH 1159 ?-Amylase is recovered from the fermentation broth, concentrated, and formulated with sodium chloride, sucrose, and water Materials used in fermentation and recovery are food grade

    34. Bioengineered ?-Amylase: The Enzyme Preparation Derived from the safe production strain. Contains the safe active component, bioengineered ?-amylase. Complies with FCC and JECFA specifications (published). Does not contain the production strain (unpublished).

    35. Bioengineered ?-Amylase: The Enzyme Preparation, cont. Does not contain plasmid DNA (unpublished) Does not contain APH(3’)II (unpublished) Is not carried over to food (syrups and alcohol) Estimated intake: negligible (unpublished) Toxicological studies: gene mutation, chromosomal aberrations, subchronic toxicity in rats, all negative (unpublished)

    36. Summary In the U.S.A., microbial enzymes intended for use in food are most commonly submitted to FDA as the subjects of GRAS notices, which do not require premarket review. GRAS Notices commonly contain published and unpublished information about: The Safety of the Enzyme The Safety of the Production Microorganism The Safety of the Manufacturing Process The Safety of the Enzyme Preparation

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